35 Burst results for "Dyson"

UPS goes back to the future with its latest delivery vehicle

AP News Radio

00:52 sec | 10 months ago

UPS goes back to the future with its latest delivery vehicle

"UPS is testing out a new delivery system it hopes will beat the traffic ease congestion and be cleaner for the environment It has a horn It's Brown has the UPS logo and carries packages but it's not a truck It's funny looking but it's probably good for the city right You don't have to block up the whole road but that's not going to take a lot of packages That's probably one building's worth the deliveries New Yorker Ian lagus found out it's an equation a pedal assist four wheel electric cargo bike like a mini slender version of the truck that UPS worker Dyson Anderson was using to deliver packages in Times Square This still pretty maneuverable It can still get you in between cars If you need it There's only one being tested in the U.S. for now and that's here UPS says it's meant for dense urban areas In Times Square I'm Julie Walker

UPS Ian Lagus Dyson Anderson Brown Times Square U.S. Julie Walker
Michael Eric Dyson & Other Dems Hope to Benefit From Replacement Theor

Mark Levin

01:20 min | 11 months ago

Michael Eric Dyson & Other Dems Hope to Benefit From Replacement Theor

"Michael Eric Dyson people of his mentality On the hardcore radical left on the one hand they denounce people who notice what he is promoting and advocating He denounces them as racists on the other hand he promotes it and advocates This is the strangest name thing And what happened in Buffalo had nothing to do With this so called replacement theory It's an ideology anyway It's not a theory And if you listen to Michael Eric Dyson or Joe Biden or Nancy Pelosi or joy Reid it's a reality That the Democrat party hopes to benefit from Now I think they they've made a big mistake we see how Hispanic voters are leaning now But let's not pretend that they're not out there promoting this And the more attacks I take from some jerk at The Huffington Post or some jerk at media matters all these Democrat party marks his front groups What do I care I mean nothing to me

Michael Eric Dyson Joy Reid Democrat Party Buffalo Joe Biden Nancy Pelosi Huffington Post
"dyson" Discussed on Jazzed About Work

Jazzed About Work

02:39 min | 11 months ago

"dyson" Discussed on Jazzed About Work

"Their problems. Whatever their problems are, not just any problems, but network in a way of do more or finding out what their problems are than you saying that you're the solution. Sometimes one great solution could lead to a great opportunity. So think about what they want and need and figure out a way to help give it to them. I think that's always good advice. 90% is the listening aspect is being able to hear something. People don't know what they are saying sometimes when they're trying to describe what's going on with their company and how they're navigating their job. They don't know what they're saying, but you could decipher that if you're listening much more than talking. It's sort of like having been married for years tomorrow. Tomorrow, I my wife and I celebrate 31 years. But after so many years, thank you. But after being so many married so many years, you hear things from the tone, and from the description and sometimes even the breath that somebody takes, then you do the actual words. Then you can go and meet that need. It's the same thing. Well, your network deeply and have those conversations where you know that you can provide that type of solution for you. That is excellent advice as always, Mark. Thank you so much for joining me here today. I look forward to our next conversation sometime and meanwhile, I hope you have a wonderful spring. Well, thank you, and you do the same. Great to talk to you. Today we've been talking with Mark Dyson about how to create an effective job search and to thrive at work. This podcast is produced by WO UB public media. Adam rich is our audio engineer. I'm your host, bev Jones, author of find your happy at work. Today's tip is that you can help people succeed in a multi generational workplace by encouraging reciprocal mentoring that means younger and older workers, pair up, together, to help each other grow. Thanks for listening to jazz about work, and if you like the show, please tell your Friends..

Mark Dyson Adam rich bev Jones Mark
"dyson" Discussed on Jazzed About Work

Jazzed About Work

08:22 min | 11 months ago

"dyson" Discussed on Jazzed About Work

"Everyone, and welcome to jazz about work where we talk about everything that might have an impact on your career. I'm your host bev Jones. I'm an executive coach and the author of find your happy at work. That's a book about taking charge of your career and making it much more rewarding. In today's show, we'll talk a lot about your career. Our return guest is Mark Anthony Dyson. He's a well-known expert on job search and on job success. You might want to check out his website the voice of job seekers. There's lots of information there, but today we'll share some of it. We'll talk about the current job market and how it might evolve in the future and we'll look at ways people on both sides of the generational divide can thrive at work. Mark will offer advice about how you can create a more effective job search and about how you can improve your situation now, even if you don't want to change jobs. Mark, since you were here last time here on just about work, which was less than a year ago, it feels like the workplace, the job market, everything about work has changed considerably. And so there are many ways we can go today. There's so much to talk about. But before we get into the big picture, I'm always interested to hear what you're up to because you're always up to something interesting. So tell us what you're doing these days, please. Well, thank you again for the opportunity. It's always wonderful to speak with you. And also thank you for coming on much. Which was last fall. And it was wonderful having you. Since then, well, pretty much has been the same thing content content and more content. What often changes is where I am, I'm writing regularly or fairly regularly for linz dot com and is a job site and they ramped up their content. So they actually approached me and asked me to come on board and to write some content for them. And it's a little bit different twist than what I've written in the past. Although I've done this type of content before, it's a little more investigative. Writing, I want to say journalism, but that's such a sacred word around. I'll kind of edit it to say investigative writing along with career advice. So I take what's going on in the news. And I turn it into actionable advice. And that's Mary the two. So yeah, and I think it's a lot different take them what most people use. So you either get one of the other, I'm trying to marry both in trying, still trying to find what's a sweet spot. I don't know if I have arrived yet, but at least they're happy with it. And I'm happy and you know, gotten some attention because of it. So, you know, we move on in that direction. So tell us again what the side is, how to spell lenzo. Dot com. Ellie in SA dot com. If you add a slash insights, you'll end up at their blog where you'll see a lot of my you'll see a lot of articles. I don't have an author page yet. I think that's coming. I don't know when it's coming, but I think it's coming to that way. You could just find me and my stuff in the meantime, you had to kind of sort through the different articles to find me. But mine is pretty distinctive. I'm not writing about resume cover letters. Somebody else's, you know, niche, I write about what I just described. Well, there is a lot going on in what you just described because the world, as I said, is changing a lot. Let's talk about job search first a little bit. And then get into kind of the bigger job market and the workplace and some of the things that we can do to be successful in the new world. One of the things I've always liked about your approach to job search is your is that you keep saying job search is a lifestyle. Is that the case more than ever? What do you mean by that? And what does that lifestyle have to look like these days? Well, I think more people have embodied it. I think the younger people in my body get even more so than us older folks. And it breaks down basically to just several elements. One, job search is a lifestyle is mobile. You're able to use your mobile phone anytime any place. And you can learn while you're standing in line by your taking a bus or an Uber. While you're at a family event or maybe at the sacred place of church, wherever that is, while you're waiting sitting, still, you can engage your career in some kind of learning or content for that fact or consumption of content. Then is 24/7 because it's any time, any time of night, somebody's awake in the world, and you think about it as we're on these different social platforms, most of us, if we have more than a few hundred connections, you're likely connected to somebody across the world where they're starting their day, like if we're here in the state, it's a 12 o'clock. At midnight, it's 8 o'clock in the morning in the UK. So think about how that is just continual is not just continuing news feed, but as a continual way to engage your career in some kind of way, it's year round, for sure. Even during the holidays, we encourage job seekers to continue to jump to trying to find a job. Any relationship can be a connection. That's valuable. And that runs any position or any age, I know people who have children connected with parents who've connected with the jobs. So relationship. And I've already stated, but basically anywhere. So, you know, your connections, your ability to learn your ability to have an impact, to be at the barbershop, it could be at a volunteer event. It could be an social family party club anywhere. Because it can be done now. All right, so let me restate this because I want to emphasize several different themes you said. So we don't lose them. Part of the lifestyle is, of course, recognizing that people don't hold the same jobs forever anymore. And so we're always kind of every day we're doing today's job and we're also preparing for the next one. And the ways you can prepare, you mentioned, you can learn. There's so much content out there that's so useful. You can connect with people through all of the apps, particularly like LinkedIn, but all kinds of things. And you can meet new people, but I want to go further than what you just said. You certainly can connect. You and I connected. I can't even remember if somebody introduced us or we just bumped into each other years ago on LinkedIn. I remember exactly how. And I was telling I.

bev Jones Mark Anthony Dyson lenzo Mark Ellie Mary UK LinkedIn
"dyson" Discussed on The 3:59

The 3:59

05:51 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on The 3:59

"So you would, it was a personal air purifying device so that you could essentially have that purified air pumped into your face. The only issues now and Twitter user brought this up that, in fact, with COVID, we are sort of the pollutants now. The human humans are expelling viruses, so there's some question whether if you even if this visor is really close to your face and knows if it's actually blowing air into it, is it, in fact, as you breathe, then spreading those that virus out to the world, you know, in that so really the jury is out in terms of how, you know, if this is actually a good idea or not. Okay, yeah, yeah, because I think I imagine folks just looking at it superficially and seeing how it looks. We'll have a lot of questions. I know this thing isn't out yet, but I have to imagine we're pretty eager at least check out what the heck this is all about. What are some of the key features for this thing that Dyson talked about? I mean, I really think it's the idea that you're in theory getting really good sounding headphones and also having purified air blown into your face. I mean, it might be good for people who have allergies or just are very sensitive to pollution, I'm just guessing what they were had in mind for this. And there are people who certainly. Have air purifiers are in their homes, would like to have something, they can actually wear and the idea that it's a non contact. People don't like the idea, usually of having a mask on their face so that this sits in front, it should be more comfortable. And easy to use..

Twitter Dyson
"dyson" Discussed on Gloss Angeles

Gloss Angeles

03:47 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on Gloss Angeles

"It helps you brush your hair while you're drying it, but it doesn't necessarily help like smooth it or straighten it. And so that was one thing they noted. A lot of people in the comments of TikTok were upset that there's no diffuser attachment for the air wrap. I think that there are additional attachments that they really didn't go in depth about in the press release for perhaps curlier hair. So stay tuned for that. This won't be available till summer 2022, but there is a girl on YouTube that has it. And I'm like, Dyson, I need answers. I've never heard of this girl forgive me if I am ignorant to the popularity of this woman. I've never heard of this woman, and I have never seen her content. So I was very confused as to how she happened to have the entire system before everybody else. Like, marianna Hewitt didn't even have it. And like this woman is a brand partner. So we need answers, Dyson. If you're listening, please send us an email. We would love to know more, but bet your bottom freaking dollar, I will be getting the new attachments. Wait, Sarah, I thought my Dyson airwrap died this weekend. It was bad. I was blow drying my hair and it just kind of stopped, and then there was one of the lights turned red, and I was like, okay, do I need to clean the filter? So, you know, I took the little cleaner, I cleaned the filter. Usually that works. No, nothing. Well then I found I forgot that the whole thing popped out of the electrical socket. You know how like the little button you have to press it was fine. I was like, did my device an air wrap just completely die on me? Yeah. It would have been, it would have been bad. That would have been devastating. Like die after the new one comes out. Yeah, no, fine. How long have we had our four or 5 years?.

Dyson marianna Hewitt YouTube Sarah
Did Biden's Blunder Increase the Odds of Putin Using Nuclear Weapons?

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:13 min | 1 year ago

Did Biden's Blunder Increase the Odds of Putin Using Nuclear Weapons?

"Are we pursuing a policy of Russian roulette with Russia? And we need to think about that. This is not prudent foreign policy. You might as well just be rolling the Dyson gambling as we are dealing with the Russian Federation. So the question is this, did the Biden blunder increase or decrease the odds of Vladimir Putin using nuclear weapons? And remember, Joe Biden did not stutter when he does that, usually he does with gaps. This is something that he deeply believes. Joe Biden would love nothing more than to try to execute a CIA operation against Vladimir Putin, was this top secret talks that slipped out of an undisciplined mind. Is this something that he didn't mean to say? Or something that he said that he didn't mean? Those are two different things. So did he say something wrong? Like, oh man, that was a mistake. Or is it a mistake that he said it? I would argue that most likely it's something that he believes that he didn't mean to say. What does that mean for the United States government? What does that mean for our current policy towards the Russian Federation? I don't think peace is coming anytime soon,

Russian Federation Vladimir Putin Joe Biden Biden CIA United States Government
"dyson" Discussed on CarCast

CarCast

05:51 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on CarCast

"And he was saying, the next generation M two will be revealed at some point this year. So it'll be a 23 model. And a lightweight variant of the M4, which is currently available. So that could be kind of interesting. I think people should sign up for those cars and I think that's a good collector car. And I do not know, Chris, you can take a look the last E36 lightweight M three to go across. But probably getting into the 80s and 90s at this point. Probably on bring a trailer you'll find them, you'll see them white with the flag with the flag, the little checkers on the front. I always felt I was looking at one of those at a dealer for a while. And it's got the radio delete, probably the cloth seat. Like it was coming out. It was probably couple of years couple of years old. Shopping around for an M three. And they're like, yeah, this one's 40,000. And if you want it without a stereo, it's 45,000. I always felt like when you make something the lightweight edition and you put the checkered or you put the MM color checkered flag on the back of stuff. It's great that you carved out 218 pounds from this thing, but I'd like a little horsepower bump. Yeah. Things at two 40. I like to get to two 63 or something. I like the notion of light in this one, and we tweak the cams. We're getting a little more out of it. Even if it's symbolic. Right, right, right. And you kind of want something other than just like exhaust and pulleys. Like you want to know that something is a little unique. It's got a unique, like you said, cams or intake manifold. It's a little more special to that car, right? And then it starts to define it differently, which some car companies were starting to get into. And you think about even in the Mustangs, like when the boss three O two came out in the 2000s, they're like, oh, this has cams and it has an intake manifold that are unique to the boss. How bad do those old Mustangs look now? I mean, not old. I mean, in 2006. Like 2005, 2006 when that came out. It was like, oh, we're bringing it back. It's the new retro body style and whatever. And how kind of bloated and they were big. They had I had one in 2005 when it came out. I had one. And on the phone with my brother and I'm like, yeah, these cars are, I don't know, 300 and something horsepower now. And I'm like, it doesn't feel fast though. It feels big. I was like, it just feels big and heavy. Well, come a long way in a short period of time. Chris Dyson professional racer man's done the 24 Hours of Le Mans three times, by the way, so I'm always interested in that, won a lot of championships and trans am. And beyond is now with us, good to talk to you, Chris. Hi, Adam. Hi, guys. Hello. How are you? And of course rob Dyson, his father, everyone's. Well, anyone who listens to this show wouldn't definitely know who rob Dyson was. Yeah, good to see you. I'm very interested in speaking to you because I got a trans am race coming up and I'm wondering if you're going to be there or if not, can I just pick your brain? Yeah, no, Adam, I will be there that the whole trans am national series is going to be at laguna and thrilled to have you out there on the grid with us. Yeah, it's really I did one professional race at willow a few years back and it was really just the most fun I've ever had in a car. I just, I just loved it. I love those cars. I love the sequential shifting. It was I'm so used to driving vintage cars. It was a nice, it felt like a nice step up toward a sort of normalcy. Like it was like, it's still a crazy race car, but it has some enough modern day accoutrements that it felt stable and dialed in and it just felt like a hair raising experience, even though you're going that much faster. Well, there's some of the fastest cars racing in the world right now, certainly the most powerful ones. And as you said, they've got some of the niceties. Obviously all the modern safety equipment were on really sticky Pirelli tires and have a lot more down force than when you would have driven the cars a few years ago. You know, you're sitting in the mid 800 horsepower range and you don't have traction control. So it's still very much a driver series. And that's what makes it so rewarding. And it's what makes the car so thrilling to race. Well, you know, when I did it at willow springs, they got that big turn 8. And you go into that turn about one 53, one 55, somewhere in that range, and we've spoken about it, but you get a lot of down force that keeps you on the track through that big turn, but I was thinking about Laguna Seca and I was like, well, where's the down force going to benefit you on that track? 'cause there's a straight, but then you almost stop to turn in the Andretti at the end. And then you get back, you get up to speed at the top of the hill, but then you drop into the corkscrew, like where does the arrow come in on a track like that or does it? All the braking zones, you have enormous down force on the car at the end of the straights. So that's probably where you're going to get the most benefit. The cars do have a little bit more low speed down force than they did. We've been allowed to add aerodynamics the last few years, but.

rob Dyson Chris Dyson Chris Adam laguna Pirelli willow springs Laguna Seca Andretti
Allen West Is Surprised Radical Left Isn't Celebrating Winsome Sears

Mark Levin

01:18 min | 1 year ago

Allen West Is Surprised Radical Left Isn't Celebrating Winsome Sears

"Would you be the first I'm just curious black governor of the state of Texas I think you would be right Yes I would be And I'll tell you why I'm asking I know I know you don't like me going there but I'm going to tell you why I'm asking But getting all this talk about this African American woman who's a radical leftist who Biden's nominating for the Supreme Court and the media or slobbering all over them So her purposes of equality and equity but they like to talk about all the time Are the media slobbering all over you No because I just happen to have the wrong thing Just make it difficult decision Socialists they would be fun and all over me Look at how they're attacking win some Sears the lieutenant governor there in Virginia I mean here's a woman that's a Jamaican immigrant legal immigrant She served in our United States Marine Corps You would think they'd be celebrating her absolutely not In fact some of the more radical African Americans who embraced this critical race theory who were given platforms on the constipated news network in MS LSD they basically said I think the guy's name is Dyson He's a real schmuck I think he said something to the effect that she's basically using a white mouth when she speaks something to that effect I mean it was really grotesque

Biden Texas Supreme Court Sears United States Marine Corps Virginia Dyson
Professor Michael Eric Dyson Gets More Divisive Over Republicans Not Trusting Election Results

Mark Levin

01:50 min | 1 year ago

Professor Michael Eric Dyson Gets More Divisive Over Republicans Not Trusting Election Results

"You wonder why America's divided Well maybe because they give cooks Like med them professor Michael Eric Dyson a platform Here he is on Saturday Cadet go It is a shame and atrocious that 13% of Republicans believe that the election was stolen This is the trumpeting of a Trump who refuses to accept the fact that he lost fair and square And so the big lie has been amplified in states even that mister Trump went after when you think about Arizona or Georgia even in Pennsylvania These Republicans strongholds at least in terms of the officials there said no we are not the ones who engaged in stratagems of suppression and that the vote couldn't be trusted But here we find out As soon as the votes have been certified and democracy took place in a reasonable fashion they turn around to introduce laws that will that will powerfully suppress the vote of African American people And we know for instance among many Republicans they have the same outlook that Mitch McConnell does He said that African Americans vote in the same numbers that Americans do Wait a minute When were we part of a different nation When were black people part of an other congregation of voices who were outside of the precincts and Providence of American democracy We know that there is a sense of black people as the other and these stratagems deployed by Republicans reveal their beliefs essentially about black citizenship not being legitimate Got that folks Why all the division Why are they hatred why all the race baiting Well you just heard it here

Mister Trump Michael Eric Dyson America Pennsylvania Arizona Georgia Mitch Mcconnell Providence
Democrats: It's the 'Death of Democracy' if They Don't Pass Their Voting Agenda

Mark Levin

01:02 min | 1 year ago

Democrats: It's the 'Death of Democracy' if They Don't Pass Their Voting Agenda

"Here is the hyperbolic end of democracy prophecies hat tip gradient cut one go Democrats fail It might be the end of American democracy I think we're one election away from the end of American democracy If they take over in 2022 that is the end of democracy and we're going to have authoritarianism I hope that we can flip this and save democracy if we can't I got to believe that fascism will take over in America and that will be the death of democracy The potential death of democracy The death of democracy Death of democracy The death of democracy as we know it This protest now is not simply about the death of George Floyd It's about the death of American democracy decency and humanity I'm sad to say Isn't that Michael What Eric Dyson American democracy he wants to protect American democracy mister producer I thought he supported critical race theory oppose the white dominant society Did he not Now he's defending democracy Shocking what a clown

George Floyd Eric Dyson America White Dominant Society Michael
Tiffany Cross Tries Brainwashing Americans, Saying Truck Drivers Are Racist

Mark Levin

01:37 min | 1 year ago

Tiffany Cross Tries Brainwashing Americans, Saying Truck Drivers Are Racist

"This is why the country is getting worse and worse in terms of division The people of this country would get along just fine but for the people who try and tear us to pieces They're trying to now brainwash everybody into this attitude Shocking Shocking And you know what I call it I call it the lowest farrakhan model Which is embraced by Tiffany cross and Michael Eric Dyson And cape fear and all the rest Regardless of the race Joe Scarborough But here's Tiffany cross On MS LSD on Saturday cut one go Well how can the industry be more welcoming Because I have to tell you I talk to a lot of truck drivers and preparing for this segment And most of these structures are people of color and they talked about hearing some of the racism over the CB This is again an industry populated by a lot of white men over the age of 55 This group of people overwhelmingly voted for Trump some people have talked about aggressive truck drivers cutting them off or not being helpful Who are these people Why didn't you give us names and interview them on the record You do know what video tape is right for television She spoke to people most of these truck drivers people of color In preparing her segment well where did you talk to them What truck stop

Tiffany Cross Michael Eric Dyson Farrakhan Joe Scarborough
MSNBC's Jonathan Capehart Demonstrates Harmful Effects of Critical Race Theory

Mark Levin

01:18 min | 1 year ago

MSNBC's Jonathan Capehart Demonstrates Harmful Effects of Critical Race Theory

"Go ahead Play on racial fears for political gain And let's be clear We're all scared to death at you Sick bastard as far as I'm concerned you're absolutely unhinged And this is what's being taught in the classroom This is what's being taught This kind of stuff For Michael Eric Dyson and Jonathan cape heart go ahead Having some of your best friends be black or family members being black guy a big in my view Just look how he creates this projection onto quote unquote white people having some black friends or black people By the way this is critical race theory too Just so you understand What I'm talking about individuals whether they have black friends or brown friends we're not talking about individual When we talk about white supremacy we're not talking about the clan or the neo Nazis No no no We're talking about the broader white race the white dominant people The white supremacy that went on that founded this nation don't you understand What are you a blackhead Don't you get it And nothing can change that unless we turn the country upside down Don't you see

Michael Eric Dyson Jonathan Cape Brown
"dyson" Discussed on The Tim Ferriss Show

The Tim Ferriss Show

04:50 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on The Tim Ferriss Show

"What you need. Is someone saying why. Why is it like at what you have to do like that. And it stops you dead in your tracks and you say forces you to not follow the positive else. Follows and students and graduates have no fear a pioneering. I've got nothing to lose one thing. I hope that we encourage shares. That failure is not not a failure doing the same thing and making the same the state. that's not a good idea that failing once or twice in the on trying to do one thing. Is i k nine wrong with that. We will learn from that danger. They teach that enough at school or university. For that matter. I'm gonna cambridge for example. They didn't have a machine shop on an assembly show by the students could do there in projects that didn't have that it was all theoretical. We gave cambridge the money to build a elect. Shaw said that the students build up ideas through building things. Using oh hands she building prototypes. I mean we we. Engineers dyson build their own. Prototypes build their strikes. And it's through that building of the testrake and the prototype and give it to someone else to build to a assistant to build you build a sell and it serves the building the price type. The testing will self that. Of course you say you experience the fada but you learn how you might change it and improve it. That's what i saw. You see through my five thousand one hundred twenty seven. Bridget's each prototype. I built myself and tested myself and it was through that total involvement that my brain started to think out myself that pro. How do i solve that problem. And that fund enough. It's the actual may keep their own. Hands is terribly imposing an. We'll give them hands and the brain and you should use the same time what's wrong. Using hands is also lowly activity. It's a it's useful. Man's always done this. I can't recall the exact expression but how our tools shape us. And that's only true where i suppose it's always true but it means it. Perhaps you should use the tool other than a keyboard sometimes not say all slave stirs on. Well i am extremely excited about the book everyone again. The book is invention subtitle a life. And i have one more question before we go before we wrap up this conversation and sometimes this question is dead end and take the blame for that if it is but i like to ask it in the lesson that is if you had a billboard metaphorically speaking on which you can put any quote could be yours someone else's any phrase word image question anything at all to impart a message to many people. What might you put on that bill. But i'd probably put two messages. One is there's nothing. Morgan always being dissatisfied always improvement and the the other is. Drop your fear failure. Don't be afraid of failure bills. You are allowed to build. We haven't gone down a dead end goal. Forbid that we get done well you know. I guess that'd be on theme. We could have just asked another question. I could have changed that question again and iterating but we happen to get it right. The first time like like the jet engine which is an incredible story. I had never heard that before. And what enjoyable conversation. I really appreciate you taking the time today. Thank you very good questions enjoyable. Chris and perhaps some day. We'll get to see you in person across the pond. But in the meantime i wish you tremendous luck with everything that you're engaged with which is a lot including launch of the book. Everyone should check it out invention subtitle a life sir. James dyson thank you again for taking the time and being so thoughtful in your answers really think people will benefit from this and to everyone listening we will have show notes with links to all resources all people. Everything mentioned in this episode as usual at teamed up blog slash podcast. And until next time. Get your hands. Dirty experiment often ask.

cambridge dyson Shaw Bridget Morgan James dyson Chris
"dyson" Discussed on The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

05:22 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

"Also those people who might look at themselves as hopeless liberal arts majors or along those lines. So i'm excited for the best questions naive questions which is why i love. Employing students graduates students because they start you off on a different train because the trump with experience is you know how to do things. But i'm Out to do things experiences a baggage that can get in the way what you need. Is someone saying why. Why is it at once you have to do like that. And it stops you dead in your tracks and you say forces you to not follow the positive else. Follows and students and graduates have no fear a pioneering. I've got nothing to lose one thing. I hope that we encourage shares. That failure is not not a failure doing the same thing and making the same the state. that's not a good idea that failing once or twice in the on trying to do one thing. Is i k nine wrong with that. We will learn from that danger. They teach that enough at school or university. For that matter. I'm gonna cambridge for example. They didn't have a machine shop on an assembly show by the students could do there in projects that didn't have that it was all theoretical. We gave cambridge the money to build a a shaw said that the students build up ideas through building things. Using oh hands that she building prototypes. I mean we we. Engineers dyson build their own. Prototypes build their ancestry strikes. And it's through that building of the testrake and the Type then give it to someone else to build to a assistant to build you build a cell and it serves the building the price type the testing will self that of course you say you experience the fada but you learn how you might change it and improve it. That's what i saw you see through my five thousand one hundred twenty seven. Bridget's each prototype. I built myself and tested myself and it was through that total involvement that my brain started to think out myself that pro. How do i solve that problem. And that fund enough seattle may keep.

cambridge shaw dyson Bridget seattle
"dyson" Discussed on The Tim Ferriss Show

The Tim Ferriss Show

08:24 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on The Tim Ferriss Show

"Will leasing fewer resources oil recycling things engineers concerned scientists consult plays problems but the pitchy is the school children and even university realized that we would rather talk about it and do something about it and i think it's a great shame so i do think a lot of people think engineering's hard and difficult. That's hans his hub difficult and perhaps it is but it's also very creative people. Don't see that either. So if i could somehow show through the book that stupid person like me. A person is not academically. Sessile is is not brennan tool to really caring about products carrying about technology carrying about engineering can produce products save energy the us fill resources and the better hopefully to achieve what young people want to achieve. Now i'm mean people won't these things they will kill for horrible diseases like alzheimer's and cancer. They won't products the use less energy the generating electricity and a clever way. Vodka show that that is a simple not having done classics school guitar. My hat into doing some of those things that may be other people would think that engineering. Wasn't this difficult thing. That seemed impossible when you look at something like the woman norm. I know some extent dyson. That can qena. It's inaccessible to young people and put up becoming more. More inaccessible as a schoolchild. Look at an iphone or at any clever technology jet engine or whatever it is. You know how it works. And you'd i believe that you could have designed one of those design a special but actually you can you really can. And that's what. I wanted this book to try show that it is young people who will solve today's and tomorrow's problems we can solve by the way without having to make life. Miserable fools doesn't just the few people who are attracted to engineer. Who can do it. Many more of us can do if we could be motivated to do so. And if we can overcome this feeling that it's impossible in the mid. I understand it. There's almost an inverse snobbery about technology. There's almost a pride that idea. Now out hang a pitch. Oh men takao. Whatever it is is almost a mark of intellectual superiority whereas i think the obvious it gets is a mock of lack of intellectual curiosity not to be to take something to bit some mendez or not able to proforma manda washing machine or short wary tastes. I think it's a shame that you're not interested in doing in solving that problem in repairing it. That's really what the book is about. And the timing is because we meaning the lack of engineers many years continuously going to the government saying we're not produce enough engineers news until finally the the minister judge education. So we'll start young university. Stop complaining and start your own university and he was bringing through a bill through the house in parliament. Which allowed anyone know anyone but someone who was able to amid the necessary ulcers and saw to start their own university so i took on the challenge of starting our in university and the reason i did eight walls that we all miss exclusively recruit graduates dyson. And that's what. I've always done. Because i believe in recruiting before enthusiasm lack of knowledge lack of experience people who've not afraid to make mistakes not not frayed. Try a new path. So we've been recruiting. All these graduates have many as one undergraduates. And i needed it because because of that because we have a very young corpus anyway but those because we we cover a very broad field of engineering everything from mechanical engineering right through to software robotics and artificial intelligence so we have a huge number of disciplines here. I wouldn't have done it if we had a very narrow field but because feel so broad. I felt we could offer the students a good experience. Just for clarity. This is the dyson institute of engineering and technology. Yes yes which is by the way. Just universities sater's so will shortly be calling ourselves university. We've one university status also horrified. Actually that two. Mondays young people have to borrow in order to go to university so living expenses and the fees have to pay said the very point in their life and they want to get married and by car buy a house live normally the seattle this huge debt. So i could see the. I'll students pay them. I would pay for their education. They would work for me apostle time and they would have. The excitement of practicing will be learning in theory and learning from what i think. The best scientists in the world engine is in the world dyson favorite have wonderful mentors. Wonderful has not academic lectures at university. They had hands on battery development scientists that beta scientists software people watch tenders robotics people all these people here and they can talk to them and learn from them. Experience ole fields and decide much will knowledge what they want to do and in fact half of them becoming software engineers because the world needs so many software engineers and they find sulfite fascination. The all those wants to do. Mechanical engineering from engineer is actually been very happy experiment. I've thoroughly enjoyed it. And i think students have as well so the timing of the book is because so. This is a really long story. I yeah it's a four year course and our first year has just graduated and the graduation ceremony been september. So i wanted to come out at that time and the theme of the book is really to have to be an expert and in fact experts. Modern unhelpful you. After i think azam curiosity a saas and determination phase of the things that will solve all the world's problems. I'm very excited on multiple fronts to see what you the university what this book does and as you just said. I think it will foster all of those things you just mentioned including the book will foster more engineers will encourage more people to embrace engineering but above and beyond that it will help people through your stories through your lessons. Learned through the principles reflected in the book to think like an engineer and to become more curious. Ask better questions even if they don't have even if they will never have any formal engineering training. That's certainly true for me. I didn't study classics. But i majored in east asian studies which has about as much application to engineering as would classics and still in the process of preparing for this conversation. And reading more about you looking at the book was struck by just how cross disciplinary and how adaptable many of the principles are in the book to include and not exclude. Also those people who might look at themselves as hopeless liberal arts majors or something along those lines so i'm excited for it. The best questions naive questions. Which is why i love. Employing students graduates students because they start you off on a different train because the trump with experience is you know how to do things. but i'm a new Out to do things experiences a baggage that.

alzheimer's dyson takao dyson institute of engineering brennan mendez cancer parliament us government seattle
"dyson" Discussed on The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

04:28 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

"And he was bringing through a bill through the house in parliament. Which allowed anyone know anyone but someone who was able to and with the necessary all and saw to start their own university. So i took on the challenge of starting are invested and the reason i did eight walls that we all miss exclusively recruit graduates dyson. And that's what. I've always done. Because i believe in recruiting before enthusiasm lack of knowledge lack of experience people who've not afraid to make mistakes not not frayed. Try a new path. So we've been recruiting. All these graduates have many as one undergraduates. And i needed it because because of that because we have a very young corpus anyway but also because we we cover a very broad field of engineering. I mean everything from mechanical engineering right through to software robotics and artificial intelligence so we have a huge number of disciplines here. I wouldn't have done it if we had a very narrow field but because feel so broad. I felt we could offer the students a good experience. Just for clarity. This is the dyson institute of engineering and technology. Yes yes which is by the way. Just universities sater's so will shortly be calling ourselves university. We've one university status. I was horrified. Actually that mata mondays young people have to borrow in order to go to university so living expenses and the fees that have to pay said the very point in their life when they want to get married and by car buy a house live normally the seattle this huge debt. So i could see the. I'll students pay them. I would pay for their education. They would work for me apostle time and they would have. The excitement of practicing will be learning in theory and learning from what i think. The best scientists in the world engineers in the world dyson favorite have wonderful mentors. Wonderful has not academic lectures at university. They had hands on battery development scientists that beta scientists software people watch tenders robotics people all these people here and they can talk to them and learn from them. Experience ole fields and decide much will knowledge what they want to do and in fact half of them becoming software engineers because the world needs so many software engineers and they find sulfite fascination. They all those wants to do. Mechanical engineering from engineer is actually been very happy experiment. I've thoroughly enjoyed it. And i think students have as well so the timing of the book is because this is a really long story. I yeah it's a four year course and our first year has just graduated and the graduation ceremony been september. So i wanted to come out at that time and the theme of the book is really to have to be an expert and experts. Modern unhelpful. You after i think azam curiosity a saas and termination phase of the things that will solve all the world's problems. I'm very excited on multiple fronts to see what you the university what this book does and as you just said. I think it will foster all of those things you just mentioned including the book will foster more engineers will encourage more people to embrace engineering but above and beyond that it will help people through your stories through your lessons. Learned through the principles reflected in the book to think like an engineer and to become more curious. Ask better questions even if they don't have even if they will never have any formal engineering training. That's certainly true for me. I didn't study classics. But i majored in east asian studies which has about as much application to engineering as would classics and still in the process of preparing for this conversation. And reading more about you looking at the book was struck by just how cross disciplinary and how adaptable many of the principles are in the book to include and not exclude..

dyson dyson institute of engineering parliament mata seattle
"dyson" Discussed on The Tim Ferriss Show

The Tim Ferriss Show

06:17 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on The Tim Ferriss Show

"We've got one of his one of the ferry. I engine he did a school of welland. And i bought it of someone. Tuesday asked who had done it found it and the done it up but it never worked very well. The fuel system didn't work. My engineers scarver. The fuel system was a rolls royce system also whistled designed system so we rebuilt the fuel system from whistled drawings and it worked perfectly and it works every time whereas rolls royce. One didn't so huge huge admiration for him. I mean that was an extraordinary develop. I'm intending an engine. That have toil thousand moving. Pause the spitfire engine arrange a time had to lease meeting pass we hugely vulnerable at cooling into one bullet through the cooling pipe. Planes headed dives. The pilot has to bailout turned it into one. moving pop brilliance breathtaking very elegant elegant now. Actually it's good segue as any. I recall the first time. I used the air blade and please forgive me if this is simplistic and please correct me. If i'm getting this description wrong but where the air is acting like a blade almost like a squeegee on a windshield pulling the water off of your hands as opposed to trying to evaporate it. And i think everyone's had the experience of using these sort of gas station bathroom or airport bathroom. Drying devices that feel like a kitten farting on your hand. I mean they do nothing so you just end up wiping it all of your hair or your clothing or something like that. How did you pick that as a product category. Was it just one of six hundred that you try within dyson and it was the one that happened to work. Could you walk us through the process of developing the air blade we were trying to use eb blaze which is a very shop laid there for another project and it wasn't quite good enough for what i can tell you what the project is. It's top secret. It wasn't quite good enough for what we were doing. But we nicest as you rented across o hands. It rippled you'll skin. We chop water on our hands and soulages scraped as you said like just like a squeegee but it's not physical is just a a just like a screen so we thought would make a great handwriting and we looked at handwriting's and how they work is they have a three kilowatt. I mean the three kilowatt heater as well as a vacuum lower fat can clean a motor blow. So that three and a half thousand watts very expensive to rum whereas all blade was any seven hundred walls and what's more the thing about the whole terrorist chapter hands is trying to as you said evaporate. The water turned the wilshire. On your hands into steve which is very expensive. Process takes a long time. And also it leaves your hands chat it removes the oil smell skin as do paper towels. We thought this makes really good handwriting. So we made a hundred happened that this was all the first application of the new technology may to it the pigs and we demanded that went one hundred twenty thousand pm instead of the normal thirty thousand dollars year. One hundred thousand invited the raise very fast. I'm gonna jet. Engine is fifteen thousand. All the and formula one engine is about nineteen thousand maximum Taking electromagnetism thirty thousand. Up two hundred twenty thousand and in hendra not a sophisticated product in the handwriting and evacuated. It gave us great f. Lower great pressure and pressure impulsive for this place. Was that the first product. And i simply don't know. Was that the first product that was sold to. I don't know if this is the right term but industrial clients as opposed to end user individuals. Or had you already developed a sales channel for that type of product that inositol. I didn't do a business plan by the way authentic restaurant and we'd like to be called industrial politics. But it's quite quite right. You're quite right now. Yes you're now you're right to. It's the first time we were not sending to two people. At high and to be honest i feel very comfortable about that but i think is a great product. Why don't you feel comfortable with that. Because i really want to make products people that hype that we only use the good thing that we use them in a railway station or nap or restaurant or it is at least ordinary people use in people like us uses. But i'm happy when i'm dealing with people. Home were the main value propositions for these industrial parties. He's a customers whether they be airports restaurants or otherwise. The energy costs and labor costs associated with the device so they could justify higher upfront price by amortizing it over a relatively short period of time in recouping that investment was that the basic pitcher was there more to it wealth that wasn't the basic peso basic pitch was a very quick way to draw your house without the waste of paper and without the excessive heat of hotter handwriting which very slow anyway and ineffective and the wonderful thing about. I'll handwrite his. You never run out of paper. I mean how many times to try and get paper out of a paper towel holding. It's not that and the other thing is is quite difficult to dry all your hands dry on deal. Fingernails for the tile whereas all spells latte so hygiene is quick.

scarver welland dyson steve
"dyson" Discussed on The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

02:32 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

"Then not the most highbrow of retail this quite proud which is very interesting thing actually because what i discovered and life is confirmed that since is that the ritu otherness interested. You are vacuuming the poor. You are the more pushing vacuuming is to publicly. The morehouse project. Because you actually do the vacuuming so. I think there's an assumption that because the vet contains expensive is by people with money and whilst that might be true there's also a great interest and people who don't have much money and it's very important purchase for them. That's fascinating interesting. It's recession proof. If you as a recession you start having expensive holidays and instead you think more about your home and of course during the pandemic that's been awesome. They true that if you're confined. Hey good filtration and you'll hi. Good vacuuming is very very important. Do you remember the terms of the deal with those retailers. Will you drop shipping. Were they taking inventory on. And then giving you net two hundred terms when i decided to my simplistic times. They should put their money with mouth is so they should buy stock. We've never ever tons consignment never on that. You need to retailer. Who believes as you believe. Who's backing your idea. A news putting efforts on monday and karen tours to most people i think would describe dyson or in. Their minds is see dyson as a premium. Bread this is in some cases probably in almost all cases and expensive relatively expensive brand. I've read a quote of yours which is and again. Please feel free to fact check. Can't trust everything you read on the internet. I don't design down to a price so loved. Here how you think about finding in solving problems picking your problems and then when you go into product development how you approach it. If price is not one of the determining factors or primary determining factor law people who designed to a price and. I absolutely say that this public huge market for that. And that's perfectly valid thing to do but i want to design something works really well and that loss and uses technology and improves the performance. All the time. That's what i'm after.

dyson karen
"dyson" Discussed on The Tim Ferriss Show

The Tim Ferriss Show

06:41 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on The Tim Ferriss Show

"Money william athletes dyson and do it. We were three engineers at the time we decided we were going to the business making vacuum cleaners. We had no factory no monday. Nothing just in crammed together in charles where the machine shop underneath a couple of quick questions you believed in it now one could imagine. There's some now in this case it wasn't supposed fallacy sunk cost fallacy. You're so invested in this that you really want to see it to the end. Did you also have consumer feedback or feedback from friends who had used prototypes. That confirmed your belief in the product. Was there some type of market feedback that also contributed to that belief in continuing. I think my friends is also ties. Mad reducing myself my family into penury. But no unfortunately not. By the way i bought out my partner by this point because he'd got fed up with the failed licensees and his financial advisers advise him to get out of those no future in it who Signed him out that story over some stiff drinks these days man or at least it used to be friendly policy and i quite understood it. You know the vat container wilson. His life it was my life not his life. So i bought him out for forty five thousand pounds and i was on my end and in many ways at schlitt i mean he was a huge help and he was my mental a great friends and a wonderful designer and engineer. I felt a bit lonely gang off without him but on the other hand in bet you made me feel better being completely on my in. It suited me that. I had no idea whether minimum wanted to buy this product. No idea retool. I haven't done any market research and you can't gun all someone whether they want to vacuum tina. That doesn't have a bag cycling instead and it's got this automatic hose comes off the bat. You can't get a straight answer to that too easy to think that you can get an off people. Whether you're products is going to be successful. It makes me think of the henry ford quote which i'm paraphrasing. But if you ask people what they wanted they would have said a faster horse something along those lines. And exactly the whole point is you've got to back your instincts yukon. Helpfulness got to take the risks. And sometimes you're going to be okay sometimes. You're not that's just nice slight fashion in a way. That's what makes it exciting. That's what makes it difficult. yes satellite. It's living on the knife itch you you don't know so did you have any difficult conversations with your wife at the time. And if so how were those navigated. How did you approach those. My wife was wonderful. The know difficult conversations. She believed in it. And she's an artist and was wonderfully supportive but she understands the need for project to create something the need to create the need to have a project so she never wants compla- they require them to show monday to grow vegetables. She made plays tubas. Hardworking and wonderfully supportive. There were never any difficult conversations even when we went along to bank with a lawyer to sign endless guarantee forms putting the house on the line every penny. We had on the nine. Wow why very lucky. Saint sainthood is inner wikipedia entry. The retail shops services. And so on as i understand. Please backcheck this. But showed the people didn't want to see their dirt this dust dog hairs etc that the vacuum cleaners bins should not be see through. So why did you decide to design in the way that you did when we went to see the retailers to try and sell that congess retail space them refused to stock it. 'cause the strange looking you could see the dust and his dyson. You'll not nouveau electrolux. Oh big brand. Seven not interested in you so we as engineers we light seeing the dust. It was incredibly satisfying and fun. If you push the machine around on the floor making noise and you could see the dos collecting in the bin. If he's going to bag you can't see your doing anything. And of course i would say not doing much but at least you can see what you're doing and you pick up interesting things although data's disgusting quite fascinating so we thought seeing the results of your devas was an impulsive part of the process. But nobody else did on. The rita's subtly didn't want that. Customers to see the debt. Walnut to brave retailers did take it all and garrison enough seeing the debt was the very thing but customers wanted to have. They wanted that. That found that excitement that satisfaction issue so again. This is what you're really asking about is market. Research is doing. can you learn from it. They answer is not much and you certainly rely so again. you have to. You have to back yourself. You have to back your judgment. It's no science. You have to believe you're right and back and actually the right more than your wrong. With those. Few intrepid retailers are willing to take a risk. I'm wondering what their risk was. Did they actually buy from you at wholesale and then stock did they take them on consignment or some type of other arrangement and what was the pricing of your vacuum compared to others in the stores. Yeah that's a very interesting question. Well i'll do it impounds but the comparison works for dollars. I mean we were selling that just on the two hundred pounds whereas as fact cleaners about fifty pounds so we walked three to four times the price of everybody else. I think the retailers didn't take it because it look different and because we went to brand the wanted to who did take it medal to cutler companies they will first.

schlitt dyson congess henry ford charles william tina wilson rita cutler
"dyson" Discussed on The Tim Ferriss Show

The Tim Ferriss Show

07:30 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on The Tim Ferriss Show

"James established the dyson institute of engineering and technology were undergraduate engineers peyser tuition and earn a full salary while completing their degree studies and working on real life projects alongside world experts in dyson global engineering research and technology teams. James is the author of the brand new book invention subtitle a life. The story of how he came to be an adventure himself and built dyson leading it to become one of the most inventive technology companies in the world. James welcome to the show. It's nice to meet you too for our discussion. I have many questions. And i come to this conversation as not just a fan in admirers but consumer and user of your products. Every dyson eleven animal about forty feet from where i'm sitting. I have hot and cool purifying fans throughout the house. Because my girlfriend and i otherwise fight over the central heating. And i want to cover some familiar ground just to establish contacts for people but will bounce around as i mentioned before we started recording and i thought we would start with a name and task for some context and that name is jeremy fry. Could you tell us who jeremy fry was. He was the sky the chocolate family the fries charter family but wasn't invente impact. His father who worked in the fries chocolate family Invented was businessman. But anyway. So i think that says fries. I much by the time they sold them. But now jeremy was an inventor was the chairman of founder of an engineering company and i went to see him to ask him for money at today. Because i've done a project which used the same architectural roof system. But he had used any satisfactory it pulled the entire factory rufa by himself with pulleys and ropes as it very light and structures on apartments to fuller type structure and i designed a theater shaped like a mushroom for the theatrical impresario. Little woods and i knew he was a millionaire so i wondered if he'd be interested in funding it. He's i'm not. Give you any money at all. But i can see. You're an ambitious designer. So why didn't you designed some things for me. That was one college. I spent three years at college. And then he offered me a job. And i went to work for him making selling designing a boat that i had designed for him. His invention engineered for him over the years. I actually worked for him for about five years. And then i branched out on my end. But i came back and we had a joint company together for few years developing a wheel boat. The went across the bush on wheels propelled incited by same wheels and also be the vat containers gather and franchising wheelchair together lecture wheelchair. How old were you when you first approached him for possible financing which he rejected but what was the ajc you would have been turned yes exactly twenty one and what did you initially go to university to study. Was it design than if it was designed with within what field three hoping to focus on. That's very christian. Dick tasks school that ingredient history. But i also did art and i. I enjoyed much more than that. In greek in ancient history and i wondered if there was a career in art. So i went to. School is an experiment. Anything else in my first year. I discovered the the the subject. Cool design in the mid sixties. Ninety sixty five design was not something that was talked about. All publicized press magazines and there was no good design in shops either. I didn't know what he was told what it was. It intrigued me. And i managed to get into the royal college of arts to study richer design at should i quick this switch to architecture because i thought it was more exciting more intellectually challenging. That's meltsa to put down thunder to designers. It's just that intrigued me more. So i spent two years doing architecture. That's how i came to do this. Button fuller type building. That's how i came to meet the chairman of engineering company. That's what really into an amateur engineer to stress. The diamond amateur engineer also trained engineer. I hope i think like an engineer. Let's dig into that last statement. Because i think there's probably a lot there. What does it mean to think like an engineer to you. Whenever i look at. I wonder how it works and then i wonder how it could work better. Could i make better is technology. I could use is the way i can. Reconfigure it is a is a radical breakthrough like ado fund lateral thinking. That would make a huge difference. I just think like bash. All the time. I mean it could be said to be rather irritating to analyze every single thing you look at rejected because it's horrid or does work very well but that's how i built and that's when i realized that i should have been an engineer should've trade as an engineer but that's all i just did it wrong way round. That's all you know. I wasn't gonna say too early in this conversation but james just imagine what you could have done. You had formal engineering career joke. I think you've done quite well. But that's just a serious point because i have a number of engineers who trained as an engineer and then trained as design. This and i've got a few other night. Me who trained design is an then become an engineer. Actually i can't do the calculations the engineers do. But i hate that. I think like an engineer and have the same solta enthusiasms and fascination and curiosity. That's what's really important. Were those fostered in any memorable way by your parents or by other people when you were growing up when you were in your younger formative years probably not because my father died when i was nine and he was in hospital from six to nine as i say i did sussex school so i didn't spend any time rid in physics labs over chemistry apps but i was interested in how things work and i did take things apart. I'm trying to put them back together again. And i did try to build lighting systems. And and certainly when i was eighteen i bought an old car and had to learn how to repair that side. I think it was something i was really taught. And if anything. I'm also dak to not someone who's eventual center thing and that identically. Light big tool things a night to discover things rather than Told them not a very cooperative person. That's probably one of your superpowers. I would imagine in a lot of respects at least from what i've gleaned if there are parents listening and somewhat selfishly asked this because i'm planning on starting a family soon but is the way to nurture that curiosity through discovery through projects like offering kids the opportunity to disassemble things and reassemble or simply disassemble. Do you have any thoughts related to how to foster and nurture that. Perhaps not by direct teaching but through other other ways of approaching it..

jeremy fry dyson institute of engineering dyson global engineering resea dyson James royal college of arts jeremy bush Dick sussex school james
"dyson" Discussed on The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

04:42 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

"Invention subtitle a life. The story of how he came to be an adventure himself and built dyson leading it to become one of the most inventive technology companies in the world. James welcome to the show. It's nice to meet you too for our discussion. I have many questions. And i come to this conversation as not just a fan in admirers but consumer and user of your products. Every dyson eleven animal about forty feet from where i'm sitting. I have hot and cool purifying fans throughout the house. Because my girlfriend and i otherwise fight over the central heating. And i want to cover some familiar ground just to establish contacts for people but will bounce around as i mentioned before we started recording and i thought we would start with a name and task for some context and that name is jeremy fry. Could you tell us who jeremy fry was. He was the sky the chocolate family the fries charter family but wasn't invente impact. His father who worked in the fries chocolate family Invented was businessman. But anyway. So i think that says fries. I very much by the time they sold them. But now jeremy was an inventor was the chairman of of an engineering company. And i went to see him to ask him for money at today. Because i've done a project which used the same architectural roof system. But he had used any satisfactory it pulled the entire factory rufa by himself with pulleys and ropes as it very light and structures on apartments to fuller type structure and i designed a theater shaped like a mushroom for the theatrical impresario. During the woods. And i knew he was a millionaire so i wondered if he'd be interested in funding it is. I'm not give you any money at all. But i can see. You're an ambitious designer. So why didn't you designed some things for me. That was one college. I spent three years at college. And then he offered me a job. And i went to work for him making selling designing a boat that i had designed for him. His invention engineered for him over the years. I actually worked for him for about five years. And then i branched out on my end..

jeremy fry dyson James jeremy
"dyson" Discussed on Breaking Beauty Podcast

Breaking Beauty Podcast

06:05 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on Breaking Beauty Podcast

"Than heat and when name just kills me right there. It's just not hot like a curling iron where you know your news like a curling iron to. That's what i use sometimes to press down. Those as that was like a hairstylist. Hack that. I learned just to it down like close to my scalp. Of course that can sometimes burn your scalp. So i guess this one wooden. Yes and also. I've done that hack too for different. Tv segments and stuff where you're on hd television and it's like your hair still you still see the faucet so annoying so with this attachment like do. I really need this. It's like it's a finishing tool right like it's not drying your hair. It's the step you at the very end. So as i don't know i don't know if this is if it's need if it's a need or want us up. Yeah yeah so i did. It and i was like shook. How satin silky. My hair was after one pass. And like i mentioned a does have a large surface area so basically like you blow dry your hair and you pop this on at the end you turn on your blow dryer once more and you just do single passes all the way round your head from the root to the end and it totally teams all of the flyaways and a so if you have any like little breakage around the hairline at the roots at all like it's invisible so what they do is affect this airflow. It's actually got that. Unique curved head. So it's gently like attracting longer hairs to the forefront and then hides the breakaways and flyways that can often stand out just with using air and it's one passed. It takes no time at all so basically this attachment i would use in place of even doing hair straightening on action because it gave me enough polish and my hair done and i felt like i cheated the system because i didn't like do my hair quote unquote. Yes just like yeah this attachment did all of the work for me like you. Already have the hairdryer out you can just switch the attachment and finish it off instead of plugging in a whole new device right. So what i'm hearing is. It's worth the forty bucks even though normally i can't even imagine paying for an extra nozzle like you. Just don't do that with dyson. They you know they make it. They make you want to write. And i'm sure john atkin has like this. Probably she got like the glassy. Bob's these days. The things courtney out whatever. All of the things. The attachment is forty dollars. Us fifty dollars canadian. But then from now on. Whenever you buy the dyson supersonic in the boxx it will come with the five different attachment. Okay the fire away attachment so if you're looking ahead to the holidays or you wanted like send someone a hint of like what you want. And you've always wanted to splurge on the supersonic now it's like even more bang for your buck because you're getting new five attachments as well and i'd say the one drawback earlene as that. I heard a lot of people online. Saying i'm really wish this attachment came with the air. Erap rather than this hairdryer. So that's fair because it does feel like yeah. I linked tool that's true. I wouldn't be surprised if that's coming next time. Untimely the holidays. They'll probably rule that. Oh yeah it's so interesting. Because i was googling around about this product. And i could tell that you know how like google sort of auto populates what people are googling. A lot of people were googling. Is their new dyson. Hairdryer this season. And so i just think the perception is that. It's almost like an iphone right. There's gotta be a new one coming. What's the next incarnation of the dice and supersonic hairdryers. Like the dyson supersonic care. Dr twelve but people are expecting that level and turnover of innovation from this brand yet will. That's when you reach conic tech status. I suppose so guys. I was like a mini dam. Goods right there. You know we're gonna hit you with the full fall roundup later this month but jill. I wanted to check ins and this is like an end of summer. You know update. Is there anything that you recommended at any time this year. And a damn goods episode that you still use like re re bought. Oh yeah recently are. What's in my cart right. Now is the rene rouleau anti bump solution that was When we talked to her in for the adult acne episode. And i raised it in the past but not very consistently and so i have been using it. I love it and have you noticed a difference. Oh yeah absolutely. Because it's just like those. Hey cystic bombs like it's hell. They hurt so much. Yeah and so when you find something that will just make those go down and not even heard so much and like i'm really trying not to like try to force them out so i will be re buying that and yeah there's tons of stuff over the years that i just go back and buy it because we do try so many things and it's like there's only so much space that you have on your mace like the face real estate you know. I find often times. I'm testing also like the products that we feature in our ads. We passed all those products. We use them ourselves or we wouldn't be talking about them. We take them just as seriously as are other recommendations so but actually one thing. I've been wearing all summer. Is one of our previous advertisers. Were not doing a campaign with them anymore. So i don't even know if we still have a promo code or whatever but this necklace. This is an beauty product. Guises this necklace from ana luisa. You know the one with us like jade colored stone and it's like i had to look it up. Venturing is how you say it okay so this is called the me sh And i've just. I've honestly worn it every single day since i put it on and talk about it in the ad i haven't taken it off and the reason why i wanted to just like update people because it's it's fourteen carat plated. It's not solid gold and the upcycle materials. Which i think is great but i wasn't sure how it was gonna last like swimming and showering and i literally i sleep with it on a shower with it on. I've taken it to the cottage and it's it just really stands up..

john atkin dyson rene rouleau Bob jill google Us ana luisa swimming
"dyson" Discussed on The Beauty Brains

The Beauty Brains

02:59 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on The Beauty Brains

"But i find that on a lower heat setting you can get a really a beautiful look with less damage and you know the fact that the only claim half the damage is not too impressive. So i would rank the three tools drier. Air rap corral straighter on indefinitely. Check out the Drier if you can it for me. Been a very nice. Drying experience very different drank experience. Well you know it reminds me of the movies whenever you have a trilogy. The first one was really good. The second one is Third one at kind of the wheels always fall loops. yeah. I can't wait to see what else they developed next. Or maybe i. I probably hairline. It looks like there actually. We had a related question from claire. She says i find that. My scalp tends to each after one to two days. If i air dry my hair rather than blow dry it. So why might this be. This is our blow dryer air dryer corner today. I'm not being facetious. Perry but have you ever blow dried your hair. I actually did. When i was in high school. I had. I kept my haircut no longer and you know i. To tell you the truth. I just kind of like the warm air on my neck even at via five. You didn't blow dry your hair. No i mean. Sometimes i would be ahead A test subject head in the salon and they would blow dry my hair so you've had done quite a bit. Oh yeah you know. I'm familiar with the experience. Yeah yeah it's it's just too much trouble now now. I don't even comb my hair. Just you see my fingers. And it's a lot of work. And i i would love to see you with a blown out quaff. That'd be really funny. It's always the guys. Get their hair done in the salon. The nineteen eighties. Bon jovi mullet can think. Oh my gosh my gosh. Wow and the the but the but part you'd part your hair right in the middle there. I'm glad i grew up in a different time. Although you the nineties in the early two thousands of brag about exactly. Well what do you think of this Airdrop and make your itchy. You know it's interesting because Obviously i don't know if it's obvious but there's not really any studies on this and i can't imagine that somebody would do any studies on this unless it's dyson and if you're somebody from dyson and you're listening i really encourage you to take a look at this because this is an interesting question. Yeah very interesting The only thing i can think of is that during the blow drying process Obviously you're playing heat to hair. He volatile is any compounds. That are on your hair or make them more fluid and when you're brushing your hair. It might help them move out down the hair shaft more..

claire Perry Bon jovi dyson
"dyson" Discussed on Jazzed About Work

Jazzed About Work

02:08 min | 1 year ago

"dyson" Discussed on Jazzed About Work

"Whole bunch of equipment around his jim but is nowhere in shape After buying all that equipment but yet if he did two or three things in lendu five or six things on one piece of equipment and do it. Well then he'll be a whole lot better shape than somebody who just has a whole bunch of things laying around the net will try our habit. Try so build your skills a little bit at a time. Take a break when you're frustrated exhausted but keep going back to it and keep doing small steps. You sort of expand your skill set in your age. Yes okay well thank you so much. I always learn from you. I always enjoy visiting with you. More and I'll just keep watching you again. Bar anthony dyson out. The voice of job seekers is there any other Final place You want to mention so people can find. Two people can find meal lincoln under mark. Anthony dyson d. y. Esa win okay. Well have a great day. Thank you for having me. Thank you today. We've been talking with. Marc anthony dyson about some of the latest trends impacted job seekers and i can't tell start over them. Today we've been talking was mark. Anthony dyson about some of the latest. Trends impacting job seekers and career builder. I'm your host beth. Jones author of think like an entrepreneur like a ceo. Today's ten is it a good way to develop. A new skill is to volunteer to take on a project that will cause you to stretch in new directions. Thanks for listening today. If you like our show. I'd love it if you would give us a five star rating..

two Anthony dyson Marc anthony dyson five beth. Jones five star Today today six things one piece Two people three things anthony dyson Esa Bar ten equipment mark lendu
Dominic Cummings Launches Attack on Boris Johnson's Integrity

LBC Election 2019

01:23 min | 2 years ago

Dominic Cummings Launches Attack on Boris Johnson's Integrity

"Suppose we should start with all of the lobbying stuff. Cameron green sale. The tax between boris. Johnson and james dyson the the intervention by dominic. Cummings yesterday which was fairly explosive. I think in so many ways and it makes you think well if this is how starting was it gonna go from here because it's quite clear that he's now gone agenda to bring down. Boris johnson. i think. I wanted this podcast to be called vacuum of integrity. Given that that was the brilliant line that dominic grieve has used this morning in. Reiter four boris johnson. Everybody who's a grievance against him is now going to weigh in eighty s that dominic cummings block which was actually quite short for him was nevertheless jam packed with content. And as you say probably the most worrying well. I mean there was there was he landed some blows with the thing itself to knee in terms of suggesting lert johnson had put off an incor- a leak inquiry into who had let out the stuff about The lockdown in autumn. Who had leaked about that. Because dominic coming suggests boris johnson. Thought the finger would be pointed. Henry newman who is carry simmons. Oh could it's like a bloody soap opera. this

Cameron Green Boris Johnson James Dyson Dominic Grieve Dominic Dominic Cummings Boris Cummings Reiter Johnson Lert Johnson Henry Newman Simmons
Smart Consumer (MM #3673)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 2 years ago

Smart Consumer (MM #3673)

"The with kevin mason. I've always tried to be a smart consumer back in the day. It wasn't quite as easy if you could afford to subscribe to consumer reports. You'd get that or go to the library to find it and have to trust your friends but the problem is everybody has different opinions now. Thanks to the internet. You can find information. You can almost too much information. You can get bogged down in all the information and all the reviews trying to figure out which ones you believe which ones you don't which one are paid for which one or fake and at the end of the day is still a flip of a coin. I've been out looking for an oscillating fan from my office. I have a small one here sitting at my desk. That just kind of moves the air around because with all the computers and all the electron. Ix gets warm in here at times. But it's not moving the air quite enough so of course. I want to find the perfect fan and we have a couple of those. But they're very expensive there. Those dyson fans. We both love them. But i don't want to spend that kind of money. So i've been out on the hunt for new oscillating fan all for about two and a half three weeks now. I love being a smart consumer but at times you can go down a rabbit hole. You can never escape.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Both About Two And A Half Three Wee Couple Dyson
Smart Consumer (MM #3673)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 2 years ago

Smart Consumer (MM #3673)

"The with kevin mason. I've always tried to be a smart consumer back in the day. It wasn't quite as easy if you could afford to subscribe to consumer reports. You'd get that or go to the library to find it and have to trust your friends but the problem is everybody has different opinions now. Thanks to the internet. You can find information. You can almost too much information. You can get bogged down in all the information and all the reviews trying to figure out which ones you believe which ones you don't which one are paid for which one or fake and at the end of the day is still a flip of a coin. I've been out looking for an oscillating fan from my office. I have a small one here sitting at my desk. That just kind of moves the air around because with all the computers and all the electron. Ix gets warm in here at times. But it's not moving the air quite enough so of course. I want to find the perfect fan and we have a couple of those. But they're very expensive there. Those dyson fans. We both love them. But i don't want to spend that kind of money. So i've been out on the hunt for new oscillating fan all for about two and a half three weeks now. I love being a smart consumer but at times you can go down a rabbit hole. You can never escape.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Both About Two And A Half Three Wee Couple Dyson
Smart Consumer (MM #3673)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 2 years ago

Smart Consumer (MM #3673)

"The with kevin mason. I've always tried to be a smart consumer back in the day. It wasn't quite as easy if you could afford to subscribe to consumer reports. You'd get that or go to the library to find it and have to trust your friends but the problem is everybody has different opinions now. Thanks to the internet. You can find information. You can almost too much information. You can get bogged down in all the information and all the reviews trying to figure out which ones you believe which ones you don't which one are paid for which one or fake and at the end of the day is still a flip of a coin. I've been out looking for an oscillating fan from my office. I have a small one here sitting at my desk. That just kind of moves the air around because with all the computers and all the electron. Ix gets warm in here at times. But it's not moving the air quite enough so of course. I want to find the perfect fan and we have a couple of those. But they're very expensive there. Those dyson fans. We both love them. But i don't want to spend that kind of money. So i've been out on the hunt for new oscillating fan all for about two and a half three weeks now. I love being a smart consumer but at times you can go down a rabbit hole. You can never escape.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Dyson
The Morning After: Dyson's new laser-equipped vacuum

Bob Sirott

00:31 sec | 2 years ago

The Morning After: Dyson's new laser-equipped vacuum

"Long had headlights on the front of them to help you see in dark areas, But Dyson is launching a new vacuum that takes it to another level. Their new vacuum has a laser on the front. Dyson says The V 15 detect model can use its green laser to expose dust particles You wouldn't be able to see in a normal situation. It also has an LCD screen that displays the size and amount of dust particles. You are picking up. All of this will cost you about $699. I'm

Dyson
Michael Eric Dyson Explains Why 'Economic Recovery Should Be Targeted Toward Have Nots'

Influencers with Andy Serwer

03:10 min | 2 years ago

Michael Eric Dyson Explains Why 'Economic Recovery Should Be Targeted Toward Have Nots'

"Talk about wealth and income inequality disproportionately affecting people of color and should the economic recovery measures be targeted therefore to these people and if so, how can that be the tough one? Yeah. Well, yeah, they definitely need to be targeted toward the less, you know fortunate and the Have Nots versus to have God's they're all kind of see but dead. You know, you got to get beyond the obsession with those socialism doctor King said we got socialism for the rich and free enterprise for the poor, right the ones who are really getting socialism and communism that goes up at the top who are Distributing their cash among themselves. There are many redistributive mechanisms to those who are beneath. Look at our housing policies. If if housing is the entree in the middle class, that's a huge mechanism of economic wealth that can be measured and we can do stuff about opening up housing markets making them more Ecuador standing with the Supreme Court saying that certain practices is not just a the consequence of it used to be I mean the intent like if you had intent to harm somebody with housing or be prejudiced thoughts, okay, you were wrong, but if the consequence was that they were still harmed. So what the Supreme Court said? No, you gotta look at consequences. Well, so outcomes are as just important just as important job. As intent that's one way another way of these educational disparities. If there is a correlation roughly hewn between what kind of education you have and what kind of money you make then it would behoove us to enforce certain educational practices that pay attention to the least of these and if the tax base is the determinant for education and so many Iraq owes then the government which has been a beneficiary of and it you know of a kind of you know, Jim Crow approach an apartheid racially speaking in the law passed to you know, fill its coffers for white education vs. Black one then we owe some money toward those people who are at the bottom of the totem pole and then figuring out what kind of jobs and job-training could help black and Indigenous and Latin X people to get higher up on the totem pole. Those are a few things that can be done and stop the voter suppression. That would be Huge thing that now those things get fought in courts, but they can also the Attorney General can have engagement with these issues on local municipalities and finally in terms of leasing, you know, under Obama Eric Holder and then Loretta Lynch, but especially Eric Holder was talking about these consent decrees and looking at these police departments and it's another thing to be done again. So look at them cuz police departments are extracting all kinds of monies. Look at Ferguson, Missouri all kind of money from the local people making their coffers fill while depleting resources for people on the ground. Those are a few ways and few things we can do to make sure that we can Target those monies toward the most vulnerable.

Supreme Court Ecuador King Jim Crow Eric Holder Loretta Lynch Iraq Government Barack Obama Ferguson Missouri
Author of 'Reckoning With Race in America' Explains Structuring of His Book

Influencers with Andy Serwer

01:47 min | 2 years ago

Author of 'Reckoning With Race in America' Explains Structuring of His Book

"To influencers. I'm Andy serwer and Welcome to our guest Michael Eric Dyson, who is a professor of Sociology at Georgetown University will be going to Vanderbilt University MSNBC political analyst and author of the new book long time coming Reckoning with race in America Michael. Nice to see you dead red to see you as well my friend and it's great to be on your show. Thank you very much. So the new book long time coming Reckoning with race in America is written as litters. Mm ordered African-Americans. Can you talk about the structure of the book and why you wanted to do the piece the the the work this way? Yeah, you know, I wanted to write letters to these murdered Martyrs and incense not simply talk about them. But speak to them a kind of rhetorical munja. Intimacy through the epistolary form letters that allow me to speak out loud think out loud. How come talk out loud about what happened to them. We are to commune with them. So to speak not in the kind of loosey-goosey spiritualist way, but in an ancestral recognition way and many of them recently arrived ancestors, Brianna Taylor Sandra boss and the Reverend clementa Pinckney hadiya Pendleton and some much older like Emmett Till. So I wanted to think out loud talk about the issues that confronted them that issues that continue to confront us off. And in communing with them talking with them talking to them about what happened after they died too in a way give a progress report of the soul of Black America wage and to figure out how we move forward

Andy Serwer Michael Eric Dyson Vanderbilt University Georgetown University America Msnbc Brianna Taylor Sandra Reverend Clementa Pinckney Michael Emmett Till Pendleton Black America
Driving the Carretera Austral, Chile

The Amateur Traveler Podcast

04:54 min | 2 years ago

Driving the Carretera Austral, Chile

"I'd like to welcome back to the show Steph dyson who has a travel journalist, a guidebook author most recently the Moon Guide to Chile and a travel blogger at worldly adventurer dot com. Steph. Welcome back to the show. Thanks having me Chris I'm excited to be back again. Well Of Truth. I should say when I say welcome back to the show, Steph has been on the show before you have heard her talking about northern Chile, a number of episodes ago I wanNA say five years ago. Yeah I think that's correct just before you started working on a guidebook. Kissed before Ya. So this is kind of rounding out that experience because the moon guy to Chile just published. And that was a quite a long amount of time working on this guidebook but also Steph was the show a week ago and something went terribly wrong and it did not record. So I appreciate your patience but I also appreciate your expertise on Chile. When. We talk about she leave this time we're talking about and I'm going to try and pronounce it the cut. US thrall the southern. Highway. Good. That was good pronunciation. I I. See you've been working on it. We'll have to do some things right this time. What is the? astral and where would we find that in Chile? The CATTA that Australia Archie means the southern highway to give you a bit of a clue and it's in Chilean Patagonia. Now, how to guy near is the sort of slightly nebulous region because nobody's really sure if it's somewhere on his own or if it belongs to other countries a what it is, but effectively, it's a region in the very far south of South America are in between Argentina and Chile. and. The kind of thorough style is the kind of rules western section. So it's the kind of Chilean bit where she gets really narrow sort of not part of the country, and it's just before you hit very southern Patagonia West toughtested by name and the destinations that you've discussed previously only put podcast bright further north than the last show we did on Patagonia, there is a lot of Patagonia. If we look at the map there. There's a lot of Chile in terms of height, not necessarily in terms of with. Yeah it's a long country and I have children most of it and it. Pile. Will End just this road is seven, hundred, seventy miles or twelve, hundred and forty kilometers. So when we talk about One week itinerary, you're going to start us not at the top and go all the way to the bottom where you're gonNA start, US. Yeah so I always recommend people planning Patagonia is starting inbound Maceda says about halfway down the cutter that'll style just outside this sort of biggest town in the area it's Koi Heike and it's an apple that where you can fly into directly in Santiago. So it makes it a really great destination to start your trip. and Are we gonNA do anything around the airport flying are where we going to start our actual trip? I would recommend picking up a call. Then you don't need a four wheel drive to cut that Australia just needs sort of reason, the high clearance because most of it is now paves. The big for the locals I'll tell you that hasn't that hasn't been paved before but yet you're gonNA jump in your car and you can head south for a couple of hours to via settled gusty steel, which really tiny little town outside of a national park. You talk about outside of national. Park. The one thing as we talk about this pretty much this whole way there are national parks everywhere I think. I'd made the analogy that if you started at the top of this highway in you're a squirrel, you could probably get to the southern tip of South America in jump from tree to tree within a national park. I'm not sure the tree is correct but the national parks is almost accurate. This just a whole lot of national parks here in southern Chile. Yeah, it's actually what the government did. Last year would start it up the root of their parks re to the parks. On, it's about two, thousand, four, hundred kilometers I believe I'm connecting pretty much port Lamont which is the very northern tip Patagonia all the way down to Cape Horn, which has its own national pockets the bit at the very bottom of South America's islands that people go. Because the sale is used around the whole and and it was a big deal because white windy down that. Square yes. Yes. There's now they sort of route to the pox. It's kind of this ingenious could you can't actually drive between all of them, but the capital style does opportunity to actually connect quite a number of them.

Chile Steph Dyson Patagonia United States South America Australia Steph Cape Horn Government Port Lamont Santiago Chris Argentina Maceda Apple Chile.
UFC 252 Round-Up

The Corner

05:22 min | 2 years ago

UFC 252 Round-Up

"We are talking and may more specifically talking about the UFC and UFC two, fifty two which just happened over this past weekend. dray looked it looked good on paper for the main card right. And I was like, okay, we got a nice little main card. Overall. I really thought it. disappointed. A. Wasn't. It wasn't it was some weird circumstance. Is Not, the fighters falls yes. It's not like they all wanted or tried to go to decisions or anything, but some sheet happened that made it kind of weak. So I will talk about John Dodson. Showing up in doing nothing. Mood he's gun shy told you these headed someone's wrong sums? Are you gotTa drop the weight? You know it's not it's admit this is mental. This is a one hundred percent mental Dj Rodham, his soul Shang soon them he probably I think. So something happened because remember when Dawson arrived on the scene like he knocked out Tj dillashaw the magic man, but he was everywhere. Hands hit bricks for hands fast as hell you couldn't take them down. Like he was easily the number one number two, the fastest fighter in division. Easy. Maybe the entire UFC. But now it's like he's completely gunshot. And visibility. Didn't he just? Fuck this, he had so much fun beating up on John Dasa just like tossing him around. I don't know who John Dyson it's over this drop the weight it won't matter if you don't let your hands go. Yeah. Morale was having a blast Murrah was in his quarter just like that's easy lay. This is mile in after the fight through the headdress back on he just didn't care and do we both picked us and I can't remember I definitely did. White I feel terrible and morale is going to be a problem at bantamweight. He's. If. He continues fighting like this. The way he's you know just out wrestling guys like he's on a nice little fight he streaked. Yeah and he was able to out strike Dotson granted Dotson tried too much to to throw hands I. Don't I don't know what the game plan is for Dotson Eurofighter anymore like why watch them fight I go to the Jimmy Rivera finally what's what's cleaning I? Don't think there is one. Rob. is on a firefight winning streak last lost. What's to Ricky Simon Smoke. Yeah. Okay. That makes sense. Okay I. Remember there was a submission. So young has buzzer. By the way you might have won that fight yet move rob has been dominant these past few fights but this the dots performance impressive. I. Think he could be a problem but I put more of the blame on John Dasa because something mental is going on with this man is not up to his capability. Yet Very Weird I. Can't call it he needs a sports psychologist. He's recapture some late when you don't even try to let the hands go. That's when you got a problem. So next fight, Herbert, Burns versus Daniel. Pineda this is where you are right and I was wrong. A feeling this and like this. I I don't know another weird fight because I think burns was just dominated from the jump. Eight just he didn't seem to have it this night. No. Cash wait forty, five, I don't. I can't. Blame it on but. The elbows came down and it was a rap so. Whichever I mean yeah I mean. Significant strikes. Ten. For burned. Fifty, seven for opinion. Yeah. I mean like it'll be like this but I kind. Win this fight, but that's wild and that was in dominant fashion. Then we go to the next night jd s versus Rosen struck. and. Bump you know super buff. Different, body. Mustached. GPS. Didn't help him because he got rocked. And slumped on cage. So the thing about Rosen's struck is what I've noticed now is yeah. Okay. Everybody's GonNa lose the Francis in God like if you rush Francis and got gotTa, you're going to lose that's what's going to happen. So this fight, he was a little bit more patient picked spots really didn't do a lot in the first round. Waiting for eighty s kind of open up getting a little bit more comfortable like ease up on the guard and he's just let it has put away. But this division. I don't want to say that there's like a huge gap is not a valid Musa Tanko gap. That's we're going to call that gap that's shift that's it is absurd. Touching her, but it's a pretty significant gap in skill after steeping. DC's probably gone. I don't know skill wise because. Roy, as he is. With all the raw power, he's still a role as an enemy fighter. Roses stroke is a raw power like the striking's there but. What happens with Steve puts him on his back. And clearly debate Baker Take Punch. So I don't I don't know who's who's going to be a problem for steep A. At this juncture, we'll talk about it in a little bit because even though I think in God who's going to be better if they have another fight. I can't. Skill wise. It's different levels of this shit.

UFC John Dodson ROY Burns Francis John Dasa Dj Rodham Dotson Dotson Eurofighter Dawson John Dyson Dray Rosen Murrah Ricky Simon Smoke Steve ROB Pineda Baker
Parking Lot Landing With Jeff King

There I Was...

13:01 min | 3 years ago

Parking Lot Landing With Jeff King

"This was in two thousand are at that point in time. I would my Turkey six at that point. I had about four hundred dollars on that particular aircraft and I used it for business and personal travel so at that point it was in September. I was during the visit. My sister and we flew from Holland to troy. Michigan and troy is a kind of an urban airport little bit north of Detroit Michigan and it was an uneventful flight. We you know the Cheer King. Six has four fuel tanks. We burn down the first two fuel tanks and landed in the left hip tank. No issues there. We rode my bike to my sisters and then came back and decided to go back home. We were GONNA stop at Hillsdale to get fuel. That's another airport that I was based out of at that point in time. And when you say we jeff who was in the airplane with you oh. I'm sorry I'm a HAM radio operator. We use that word we sometimes so no. I okay got it. You were so low and flying over to see your sister who I know you shared with us was sick. And you're flying over to visit her and then your plan was to visit her for a bit and then turn around and depart for home. That same evening is that right. That's correct come home that evening. So we wrote our bike back to the airport and Dinner run up and everything seemed fine. I had been doing short field takeoffs to says as a habit even though this was not really a short field and that was about a thousand pounds under gross so we didn't take off the twenty degrees flaps What up pretty fast. We pitched over from V. Ecstasy Y and immediately after that with the answer starts to stumble and then we lost power. It was of course it was nighttime. At that point we were on the eastbound runway runway nine and two seven at that particular report and started a turn it back to the field and then all of a sudden Stalin came on. And we're at roughly three hundred feet at that point. In time at that point you would your engine fails or I head engine stumble with Cherokee six four take aircraft and if you're going to get any kind of range out of it you would run out of fuel at altitude and the engine would star. Bill. Would I talk about that? You're eight ten thousand feet up. Always have something picked out ahead of time so your your heart would always flutter. I Dunno if anyone's ever not changed a tank purpose or not in for your heart flutters. Well this time. It wasn't on purpose this time. I wasn't ten thousand feet. This time. I was up three hundred feet. So you got that moment where you. Oh my gosh. A couple seconds elapses. It seems like a couple of minutes. So short field takeoffs techniques who knows is relatively high you're climbing out at Vx SPEED. You're just beginning to push over to capture V. Y. and your engine stumbles and then very shortly thereafter. You see the stall light right so at the airport when Stalin came on thankfully might training. At least I feel like my training kicked in at that point. My instructor be if our instructor. Jason Dyson from years past always messed around with me. I guess this lack of a better where we would fail the engine on me and he'd always tell me if you lose your engine on takeoff. The Insurance Company owns the airplane. What he meant by that was that you worry about yourself. You don't worry about your airplane. You worry about yourself so when that stall I came on I just pushed the forward. I didn't see what was outside. I didn't I didn't even look outside of this. Pushing forward was at a fairly aggressive. Push Jeff relatively hard or Takasu. Assume that that push. Yeah you have to understand. This whole series of events probably was fifteen to twenty seconds for the time I rotated to the time the engine baby ten fifteen seconds so there. There was a lot going on in a very short period of time so I would say the push was relatively hardware pushed it forward. Yeah where I was pitching over the top. I dropped flaps out as well. I took a twenty degrees. I dropped in ten when I went to wide and then I immediately pulled some flaps in his well once I was pitched down because I knew there was there was not a lot of space in front of me and I was correct. There wasn't so I'm I'm pitch down. I'm seeing portion of the Walmart parking lot in front of me and then a feel beyond their. I just pushed it down. I think one of the witnesses said he went into a dive and I did because I did not have a lot a lot of space to land the point. Jeff how is the visibility here? So you said you're up about three hundred feet when it stumbles. You're pushing over so now you can see over the knows. I mean you only had a couple seconds to make a decision here on where to go was visibility. An issue for you at all. Visibility was on an issue. The only thing with this particular field was I. My in-laws lived in the area. My sister lived in the area side using air for quite a bit so I knew there wasn't a lot a lot of choices to go if she had a problem. Yeah that looking at where you were in. That era means basically the Detroit Metro area. It's pretty crowded around that airport for sure. It's a industrial a mixed industrial commercial retail area. Yeah any Cherokee. Six has a relatively long nose. So when you're pissed up like that in a short field takeoff you pitch over visibility over the nose for at least a little bit can be an issue but you pitch over to start capturing glider really. You weren't interested in capturing a glide you're religious interested in preventing the stall at that point at that point it was just it was just muscle memory. I guess for lack of a better word. Where then you're training kicks in and you're doing things you're supposed to be doing and not thinking about it. So I I just I saw that stall icon and I thought about departure stalls. I mean again. It was such a limited period of time. I remember on the way down. The properties rotating slowly probably from the wind are not sure that the NTSB thought possibly the engine starting to catch again. And there's always coming down but at that point I stopped doing any of the checks doing and I just committed to the landing in trying to retain control the aircraft and was the Walmart parking lot straight ahead. Did you have to make a slight turn to get there? Where was it in relation to the attitude of your airplane while it was laughed and I started to do a turn when the ancient stumbled to try to come back to the field so call them turn right when that style came on. I I gave up. I know I've got to save myself fly. The airplane fly the airplane. Fly that Europe Lane. What I saw my windshield again was pretty surreal. I saw a white van. There was a very narrow strip of the parking lot that was free of cars. I saw white van ahead of me. Turning the left it turned out it was a white car but from that altitude looked like a white van and I just basically all my gosh. I hope he turns. I hope he turns. Because that's the only option. I have a whole bunch of parked cars and to the right of me. It was dark. I really couldn't see to the right of me. I had to go where I could see. Thankfully he turned. It probably wouldn't have been an issue for him anyway. She was so far away. But still if you saw the photographs that I sent there was like an alley behind a row of buildings and I was kind of aiming for the alley. That alley was behind a strip mall behind. The store is a Walmart. I was passing over. Then there was a parking lot. Anyth- me then a strip mall that had a alley behind it. I was trying to turn to edge between there and the feel Birla's again that turn was roughly from the time your engine sputtered. You start turning you. Were turning back with a sputtering engine then Pretty Soon. You realize the engines had quit. You're about to stall you push over and so that was About a ninety degree. Turn away from runway heading to head towards this parking lot. Is that about right arm? Say about sixty to seventy degrees but yeah right okay so laughing more or less north okay and you really have limited options. You pushed down to prevent the stall you seeing the only real open spaces parking lot. So you're pushing to keep flying airspeed into get into this parking lot. Did you have any ability as you came down for lateral control to miss? You know lighting or cars or anything like that or you pretty much really minimally guiding the airplane at this point I had enough control to put a heart slip in also to try to get down Got It okay. Yeah you can see the parking lot for quite well but as far as being able to see what's around you you really couldn't like I hook theon right main landing gear on a shopping cart corral when I was flaring and I didn't even see that yeah. I saw that in the video. You sent by the way for our listeners. We'll have the pictures that Jefferson and the short video clip from the parking lot that shows a portion of a crash up on our website. So That is interesting so you turn it. You see the parking lot but you're too high so now you're into a pretty good slip to try to lose that altitude to get down to the parking lot and then you come in and take it from there so I'm pushing down hard starting to flare and I didn't see the shopping cart crowd but it hooked my right main as I said. Toilet the right main often it went shopping. Carts went flying in the air. I guess the at this point it starts to become I mean the whole thing was surreal but then it becomes extremely surreal at this point. I guess the first impression layer craft landed pretty hard Cherki sixes glide like a brick and of course I lost my right man. I didn't know it but I lost my right main. Sorry hit down pretty hard. I was a little bit stunned for a moment. When I hit the ground then became really surreal. Like I said I imagine yourself on the expressway. Drive your card about maybe seventy miles an hour and you go through a bunch of shopping carts. I mean they're flying up all around the airplane That was pretty bizarre. Then I'm sliding across the parking lot in this aircraft you know. I don't have any control. I mean there's no steering control all I mean I don't my right man I I. I was hoping to go between the Strip mall and the right side of the parking lot but the plane started to go to the right because there was no right it was dragging thankfully to the right was there was nothing to the right other than the embankment. Another parking lot about a five foot drop roughly so I'm sliding along okay. I think I'm going to live at this point. I'm shook it up but you know all my body parts are attached the cabins and tech which I got to say about Piper Cabin was was stayed intact through the whole accident so all of a sudden I'd see this bright white lights on my right side I go by. What is this all about? You know that lasted for about a second. And I'll get back to the moment. And then I shout over the parking lot over the embankment which is about a five foot drop that was on their big bump and then finally came to stop at the edge of the second part right the field or back to that white light as they say. I'm not really a religious person but apparently that was the tip tank getting sheared off on the The curb of the of the first part is that went over the embankment the Cherokee six has a fiberglass tank on it so it totally open it I at seventeen gallons in the right tank and totally open the tank up before an accident. And there's a number of things you're supposed to. Todd opened the door up. Turn the electrical off well. I didn't turn electoral off. I had incandescent lightbulb on the right tip. But as soon as the tip take opened up and of course Saddam flight broken immediately caused a fireball. Well thankfully the fireball and the gasoline got left behind and I kept going so I I come to a stop I look out my right window and the right. There's a small fire in the right wing. I didn't know I'd lost all my fuel. It was what was left so I- scramble out of the airplane I literally You can see one of the pictures where the right. Meanwhile sitting next to the right wing I literally had to dodge the right. The right wheels bouncing across the parking lot heady get the airplane. I had to either dodge it when I got on the airplane. As you're playing was a small fire the right wing. I didn't know the fuel situation there was you know. And of course I saw a huge fire behind me. I just got away from the airplane at that point so you survived the crash. You step out dodge. The right landing gear still bouncing down the pavement towards you and then what was your next action from there you're standing there looking at this Wreck of an airplane and thankful that you survived it. Thankful that the airplane protected you and then would you do jeff. Well at that point I ran up the embankment back onto the main Walmart. Parking Lot and there was a few people there. I I guess one of them did you. They asked me if the pilots okay and I said well I was the pilot. I'm okay everything's trying to register at that point and I asked to call nine one one. They already had called nine one one and we just waited for the police to get there and so forth. What an interesting deal. That happens so quickly. From your estimation from the time you release breaks till I don't know maybe thirty seconds forty five seconds later you're standing up on that embankment looking at your

Walmart Jeff Strip Mall Detroit Stalin Dodge Michigan Foot Drop Troy Instructor Ntsb Holland Jason Dyson Alley Piper Cabin